Man as Earth Citizen and Cosmic Citizen, Michael and the Dragon
HEN anthroposophy is discussed in certain circles today, one of the
many misstatements made about it is that it is intellectualistic, that
it appeals too predominantly to the scientific mind, and that it does
not sufficiently consider the needs of the human Gemüt.
For this reason I have chosen Anthroposophy and the Human
Gemüt as the subject of this short cycle of lectures which,
to my great satisfaction, I am able to deliver to you here in Vienna,
my dear friends.
The human Gemüt has indeed been wholly excluded from the
domain of cognition by the intellectualistic development of
civilization in the last three or four centuries. It is true that
today one never tires of insisting that man cannot stop short at what
the dry, matter-of-fact intellect can comprehend. Nevertheless, when
it is a case of acquiring knowledge people depend exclusively upon
this intellect. On the other hand, it is constantly being emphasized
that the human Gemüt ought to come into its own again
— yet it is not given the chance to do so. It is denied the
opportunity of making any contact whatever with cosmic enigmas,
and its sphere of action is limited to the most intimate concerns of
men, to matters that are decided only in the most personal way.
Today we shall discuss first in what I might call a sort of historical
retrospect how, in earlier periods of human evolution, this
Gemüt was granted a voice in the search for knowledge,
when it was permitted to conjure up grandiose and mighty images before
the human soul, intended to illuminate man's efforts of realizing his
incorporation into the body of world events, into the cosmos, and his
participation in the changing times. In those days when the human
Gemüt was still allowed to contribute its share in the
matter of world views, these images really constituted the most
important element of them. They represented the vast, comprehensive
cosmic connections and assigned man his position in them.
In order to create a basis for further study of the human
Gemüt from the viewpoint of anthroposophy, I should like
to present to you today one of those grandiose, majestic images that
formerly were intended to function as I have indicated. It is at the
same time one of those images especially fitted, at present, to be
brought before men's souls in a new manner, with which we shall also
deal. I should like to talk to you about that image with which you are
all familiar, but whose significance for human consciousness has
gradually partly faded, partly suffered through misconception: I refer
to the image of the conflict, the battle, of Michael with the
Dragon. Many people are still deeply affected by it, but its more
profound content is either dim or misunderstood. At best it makes no
such close contact with the human Gemüt as was once the
case, even as late as the 18th Century. People of today have no
conception of the changes that have taken place in this respect, of
how great a proportion of what so-called clever people call fantastic
visions constituted the most serious elements of the ancient world
views. This has been preeminently the case with the image of Michael's
combat with the Dragon.
Nowadays, when a man reflects upon his development on the earth, a
materialist world view inclines him to trace his relatively more
perfect human form back to less perfect ones, farther and farther back
to physical-animal forbears. In this way one really moves away from
present-day man who is able to experience his own being in an inner,
psycho-spiritual way, and arrives at far more material creatures from
whom man is supposed to have descended — creatures that stood
much closer to material existence. People assume that matter has
gradually developed upward to the point where it experiences spirit.
That was not the view in comparatively recent times: it was really the
exact opposite.
Even as late as the 18th Century, when those who had not been infected
by the materialistic viewpoint and frame of mind — there were not
yet many who were so infected — cast their inner gaze back to
prehistoric mankind, they looked upon their ancestors not as beings
less human than themselves but as beings more spiritual. They beheld
beings in whom spirituality was so inherent that they did not assume
physical bodies in the sense that people on earth do today.
Incidentally, the earth did not even exist then. They beheld beings
living in a higher, more spiritual way and having — to express it
crudely — a body of much finer, more spiritual substance. To that
sphere one did not assign beings like present-day men but more exalted
ones — beings having at most an etheric body, not a physical one.
Such, approximately, were our ancestors as people then conceived them.
People used to look back at a time when there were not so-called
higher animals either, when at most there were animals whose
descendants of the jelly-fish kind live in the oceans of today. On
what was the ancestor of our earth, they represented, so to speak, the
animal kingdom, the plane below that of man; and above the latter was
the kingdom embracing only beings with at most an etheric body. What I
enumerated in my
Occult Science, an Outline,
as beings of the
higher hierarchies would still be today, though in a different form,
what was then considered in a certain sense the ancestry of man.
These beings — Angeloi, Archangeloi, and Archai — in the
stage of their evolution of that time, were not destined to be free
beings in the sense in which today we speak of freedom in connection
with man. The will of these beings was not experienced by them in such
a way as to give them that singular feeling we express by the phrase:
to desire something arbitrarily. These beings desired nothing
arbitrarily; they willed what flowed into their being as divine will;
they had completely identified their will with the divine will. The
divine beings ranking above them and signifying, in their
interrelationships, the divine guidance of the world — these
beings willed, in a sense, through the lower spirits — archangels
and angels; so that the latter willed absolutely according to the
purpose and in the sense of superior, divine-spiritual will.
The world of ideas of this older mankind was as follows: In that
ancient epoch the time had not yet arrived in which beings could
develop who would be conscious of the feeling of freedom. The
divine-spiritual world-order had postponed that moment to a later
epoch, when a number of those spirits, identified with the divine
will, were, in a sense, to receive a free will of their own. That was
to occur when the right time had come in world evolution. — It is
not my purpose to corroborate today from the anthroposophical
viewpoint what I have been characterizing; that will be done in the
next lectures. Today I am merely describing the conceptions occupying
the most enlightened spirits even as late as the 18th Century. I shall
present them historically, for only by this method shall we arrive at
a new view of the problem of reviving these conceptions in a different
form.
But then — as these people saw it — among these spirits,
whose real cosmic destiny was to remain identified with the will of
the divine spirits, there arose a number of beings that wanted to
disassociate their will, as it were, to emancipate it, from the divine
will. In superhuman pride, certain beings revolted because they
desired freedom of will before the time had come for their freedom to
mature; and the most important one of these beings, their leader, was
conceived of as the being taking shape in the Dragon that
Michael combats — Michael, who remained above in the realm
of those spirits that wanted to continue molding their will to the
divine-spiritual will above them.
By thus remaining steadfast within the divine-spiritual will, Michael
received the impulse to deal adequately with the spirit that grasped
at freedom prematurely, if I may put it that way; for the forms
possessed by the beings of the hierarchy of the Angeloi, Archangeloi,
and Archai were simply not adapted to a being destined to have a free
will, emancipated from divine will, as described. Not until later in
world evolution were such forms to come into being, namely, the human
form. — But all this is conceived as happening in a period in
which cosmic development of the human form was not yet possible; nor
were the higher animal forms possible — only the low ones I
mentioned.
Thus a form had to come into being that might be called cosmically
contradictory, and the refractory spirit had to be poured into this
mold, so to speak. It could not be an animal form like those destined
to appear only later, nor could it be the form of an animal of that
time, of the then prevalent softer matter, so to say. It could only be
an animal form differing from any that would be possible in the
physical world, yet resembling an animal by reason of representing a
cosmic contradiction. And the only form that could be evolved out of
what was possible at that time is the form of the Dragon. Naturally it
was interpreted in various ways when painted or otherwise represented
— more or less suitably, according to the inner imaginative
cognition of the artist concerning what was possible at that time in a
being that had developed a refractory will. But in any case this form
is not to be found among those that became possible in the animal
scale up to man in the physical world: it had to remain a
super-sensible being. But as such it could not exist in the realm
inhabited by the beings of the higher hierarchies — angels,
archangels, and so forth: it had to be transferred, as it were, placed
among the beings that could evolve in the course of physical
development. And that is the story of “The Fall of the Dragon
from Heaven to Earth.” It was Michael's deed, this bestowing of a
form that is supra-animalistic: super-sensible, but intolerable in the
super-sensible realm: for although it is super-sensible it is
incompatible with the realm of the super-sensible where it existed
before it rebelled.
Thus this form was transferred to the physical world, but as a
superphysical, super-sensible form. It lived thereafter in the realm
where the minerals, plants, and animals live: in what became the
earth. But it did not live there in such a way that a human eye could
perceive it as it does an ordinary animal. When the soul's eye is
raised to those worlds for which provision was made, so to speak, in
the plan of higher worlds, it beholds in its imaginations the beings
of the higher hierarchies; when the human physical eye observes the
physical world it sees simply what has come into being in the various
kingdoms of nature, up to the form of the physical-sensible human
being. But when the soul's eye is directed to what physical nature
embraces, it beholds this inherently contradictory form of the
Adversary, of him who is like an animal and yet not like an animal,
who dwells in the visible world, yet is himself invisible: it beholds
the form of the Dragon. And in the whole genesis of the Dragon men of
old saw the act of Michael, who remained in the realm of spirit in the
form suitable to that realm.
Now the earth came into being, and with it, man; and it was intended
that man should become, in a sense, a twofold being. With one part of
his being, with his psycho-spiritual part, he was to reach up into
what is called the heavenly, the super-sensible world; and with the
other, with the physical-etheric part, he was to belong to that nature
which came into being as earth-nature, as a new cosmic body — the
cosmic body to which the apostate spirit, the Adversary, was
relegated. This is where man had to come into being. He was the being
who, according to the primordial decree that underlies all, belongs in
this world. Man belonged on the earth. The Dragon did not belong on
the earth, but he had been transferred thither.
And now consider what man encountered on the earth, as he came into
existence with the earth. He encountered what had developed as
external nature out of previous nature kingdoms, tending toward and
culminating in our present mineral, plant, and animal kingdoms, up to
his own physical form. That is what he encountered — in other
words, what we are accustomed to call extra-human nature. What was
this? It was, and still is today, the perpetuation of what was
intended by the highest creative powers in the continuous plan for the
world's evolution. That is why the human being, in experiencing it in
his Gemüt, can look out upon external nature, upon the
minerals and all that is connected with the mineral world, upon the
wondrous crystal formations — also upon the mountains, the
clouds, and all the other forms — and he beholds this outer
nature in its condition of death, as it were; of not being alive. But
he sees all this that is not alive as something that an earlier divine
world discarded — just as the human corpse, though in a different
significance, is discarded by the living man at death.
Although the aspect of the human corpse as it appears to us is not
primarily anything that can impress us positively, yet that which, in
a certain sense, is also a divine corpse, though on a higher plane,
and which originated in the mineral kingdom, may be regarded as the
factor whose form and shape reflects the originally formless-living
divinity. And what then comes into being as the higher kingdoms of
nature can be regarded as a further reflection of what originally
existed as the formless divine. So man can gaze upon the whole of
nature and may feel that this extra-human nature is a mirror of the
divine in the world. And after all, that is what nature is intended to
give to the human Gemüt. Naïvely, and not through
speculation, man must be able to feel joy and accord at the sight of
this or that manifestation of nature, feel inner jubilation and
enthusiasm when he experiences creative nature in its sprouting and
blossoming. And his very unawareness of the cause of this elation,
this enthusiasm, this overflowing joy in nature — that is what
should evoke deep down in his heart the feeling that his
Gemüt is so intimately related to this nature that he can
say to himself — though in dim consciousness: all this the Gods
have taken out of themselves and established in the world as their
mirror — the same gods from whom my Gemüt derived,
from whom I myself sprang by a different way. — And all our inner
elation and joy in nature, all that rises in us as a feeling of
release when we participate vividly in the freshness of nature, all
this should be attuned to the feeling of relationship between our
human Gemüt and what lives out there in nature as a mirror
of Divinity.
As you know, man's position in his evolution is such that he takes
nature into himself — takes it in through nourishment, through
breathing, and — though in a spiritual way — through
perceiving it with his senses. In these three ways external nature
enters into man, and it is this that makes him a twofold being.
Through his psycho-spiritual being he is related to the beings of the
higher hierarchies, but a part of his being he must form out of what
he finds in nature. That he takes into himself; and by being received
in him as nourishment, as the stimulus of breathing, and even in the
more delicate etheric process of perception, it extends in him the
processes of outer nature. This appears in him as instinct, passion,
animal lust — as everything animalistic that rises out of the
depths of his nature. Let us note that carefully. Out there we see
wondrously formed crystals, mineral masses that tower into gigantic
mountains, fresh mineral forms that flow as water over the earth in
the most manifold ways. On a higher plane of formative force we have
before us the burgeoning substance and nature of plants, the endless
variety of animal forms, and finally the human physical form itself.
All that, living in outer nature, is a mirror of the Godhead. It
stands there in its marvelous naïve innocence before the human
Gemüt, just because it mirrors the Godhead and is at
bottom nothing but a pure reflection. Only, one must understand this
reflection. Primarily it is not to be comprehended by the intellect,
but only, as we shall hear in the next lectures, precisely by the
Gemüt. But if man does understand it with his
Gemüt — and in the olden times of which I spoke, men
did — he sees it as a mirror of the Godhead. — but then he
turns to what lives in nature — in the salts, in plants, and in
the parts of animals that enter his own body; and he observes what it
is that sprouts in the innocent green of the plants and what is even
still present in a naïve way in the animal body. All this he now
perceives when he looks into himself: he sees it arising in him as
passions, as bestial lusts, animal instincts; and he perceives what
nature becomes in him.
That was the feeling still cherished by many of the most enlightened
men even in the 18th Century. They still felt vividly the difference
between outer nature and what nature becomes after man has devoured,
breathed, and perceived it. They felt intensely the difference between
the naïve outer nature, perceptible to the senses, on the one
hand, and human, inwardly surging sensuality, on the other. This
difference was still livingly clear to many men who in the 18th
Century, experienced nature and man and described them to their
pupils, described how nature and man are involved in the conflict
between Michael and the Dragon.
In considering that this radical contrast still occupied the souls of
men in the 18th Century — outer nature in its essential
innocence, nature within man in its corruption — we must now
recall the Dragon that Michael relegated to this world of nature
because he found him unworthy to remain in the world of spirituality.
Out there in the world of minerals, plants, even of animals, that
Dragon, whose form is incompatible with nature, assumed none of the
forms of nature beings. He assumed that dragon form which today must
seem fantastic to many of us — a form that must inevitably remain
super-sensible. It cannot enter a mineral, a plant, or an animal, nor
can it enter a physical human body. But it can enter that which outer,
innocent nature becomes, in the form of guilt in the welling-up of
life of instincts in the physical human body. Thus many people as late
as the 18th Century said: And the Dragon, the Old Serpent, was cast
out of heaven down to the earth, where he had no home; but then he
erected his bulwark in the being of man, and now he is entrenched in
human nature.
In this way that mighty image of Michael and the Dragon still
constituted for those times an integral part of human cognition. An
anthroposophy appropriate to that period would have to explain that by
taking outer nature into himself through nourishment, breathing, and
perception, man creates within himself a sphere of action for the
Dragon. The Dragon lives in human nature; and this conception dwelt so
definitely in the Gemüt of 18th Century men that one could
easily imagine them as having stationed some clairvoyant being on
another planet to draw a picture of the earth; and he would have shown
everything existing in the minerals, plants and animals — in
short, in the extra-human — as bearing no trace of the Dragon,
but he would have drawn the Dragon as coiling through the animality in
man, thereby representing an earth-being.
Thus the situation had changed for people of the 18th Century from
that out of which it all had grown in pre-human times. For
pre-humanity the conflict between Michael and the Dragon had to be
located in outer objectivity, so to speak; but now the Dragon was
outwardly nowhere to be found. Where was he? Where would one have to
look for him? Anywhere wherever there were men on earth. That's where
he was. If Michael wanted to carry on his mission, which in pre-human
times lay in objective nature, when his task was to conquer the
Dragon, the world-monster, externally, he must henceforth continue the
struggle within human nature. — This occurred in the remote past
and persisted into the 18th Century. But those who held this view knew
that they had transferred to the inner man an event that had formerly
been a cosmic one; and they said, in effect: Look back to olden times
when you must imagine Michael to have cast the Dragon out of heaven
down to earth — an event taking place in extra-human worlds. And
behold the later time: man comes to earth, he takes into himself outer
nature, transforms it, thus enabling the Dragon to take possession of
it, and the conflict between Michael and the Dragon must henceforth be
carried on on the earth.
Such thought trends were not as abstract as people of the present
would like thoughts to be. Today people like to get along with
thoughts as obvious as possible. They put it this way: Well, formerly
an event like the conflict between Michael and the Dragon was simply
thought of as external; but during the course of evolution mankind has
turned inward, hence such an event is now perceived only inwardly.
— Truly, those who are content to stop at such abstractions are
not to be envied, and in any case they fail to envision the course of
the world history of human thought. For it happened as I have just
presented it; the outer cosmic conflict of Michael and the Dragon was
transferred to the inner human being, because only in human nature
could the Dragon now find his sphere of action.
But precisely this infused into the Michael problem the germinating of
human freedom; for if the conflict had continued within man in the
same way it had formerly occurred without, the human being would
positively have become an automaton. By reason of being transferred to
the inner being, the struggle became in a sense — expressed by an
outer abstraction — a battle of the higher nature in man against
the lower. But the only form it could assume for human consciousness
was that of Michael in the super-sensible worlds, to which men were led
to lift their gaze. And as a matter of fact, in the 18th Century there
still existed numerous guides, instructions, all providing ways by
which men could reach the sphere of Michael, so that with the help of
his strength they might fight the Dragon dwelling in their own animal
nature.
Such a man, able to see into the deeper spiritual life of the 18th
Century would have to be represented pictorially somewhat as follows:
outwardly the human form; in the lower, animalistic portion the Dragon
writhing — even coiling about the heart; but then — behind
the man, as it were, for we see the higher things with the back of our
head — the outer cosmic figure of Michael, towering, radiant,
retaining his cosmic nature but reflecting it in the higher human
nature, so that the man's own etheric body reflects etherically the
cosmic figure of Michael. Then there would be visible in this human
head — but working down into the heart — the power of
Michael, crushing the Dragon and causing his blood to flow down from
the man's heart to the limbs.
That was the picture of the inner-human struggle of Michael with the
dragon still harbored by many people of the 18th Century. It was also
the picture which suggested at that time to many people that it was
their duty to conquer the “lower” with the help of the
“higher,” as they expressed it: that man needed the Michael
power for his own life.
The intellect sees the Kant-Laplace theory; it sees the Kant-Laplace
primal vapor — perhaps a spiral vapor. Out of this, planets
evolve, leaving the sun in the middle. On one of the planets gradually
arise the kingdoms of nature; man comes into being. And looking into
the future, all this is seen to pass over again into the great
graveyard of natural existence — The intellect cannot help
imagining the matter in this way; and because more and more the
intellect has become the only recognized autocrat of human cognition,
the world view has gradually become what it is for mankind in general.
But in all those earlier people of whom I have spoken today the eye of
the Gemüt, as I might call it, was active. In his
intellect a man can isolate himself from the world, for everyone has
his own head and in that head his own thoughts. In his
Gemüt he cannot do that, for the Gemüt is not
dependent upon the head but upon the rhythmic organism of man. The air
I have within me at the present moment, I did not have within me a
moment ago: it was the general air, and in another moment it will
again be the general air when I exhale it. It is only the head that
isolates man, makes of him a hermit on the earth. Even in respect of
the physical organization of his Gemüt, man is not
isolated in this way: in that respect he belongs to the cosmos, is
merely a figure in the cosmos.
But gradually the Gemüt lost its power of vision, and the
head alone became seeing. The head alone, however, develops only
intellectuality — it isolates man. When men still saw with their
Gemüt they did not project abstract thoughts into the
cosmos with the object of interpreting it, of explaining it: they
still read grandiose images into it, {Translator's Note:
“Saw” them into it, is Rudolf Steiner's expression} like
that of Michael's Fight with the Dragon. Such a man saw what lived in
his own nature and being, something that had evolved out of the world,
out of the cosmos, as I described it today. He saw the inner Michael
struggle come to life in the human being, in the anthropos, and
take the place of the external Michael battle in the cosmos. He saw
anthroposophy develop out of cosmosophy. And whenever we
look back to an older world view from the abstract thoughts that
affect us as cold and matter-of-fact, whose intellectuality makes us
shiver, we are guided to images, one of the most grandiose of which is
this of Michael at war with the Dragon; Michael, who first cast the
Dragon to earth where, I might say, the Dragon could occupy his human
fortress; Michael, who then became the fighter of the Dragon in man,
as described.
In this picture that I have evoked for you, Michael stands cosmically
behind man, while within man there is an etheric image of Michael that
wages the real battle through which man can gradually become free; for
it is not Michael himself who wages the battle, but human devotion and
the resulting image of Michael. In the cosmic Michael there still
lives that being to whom men can look up and who engaged in the
original cosmic struggle with the Dragon. Truly, not upon earth alone
do events take place — in fact, earth events remain
incomprehensible for us unless we are able to see them as images of
events in the super-sensible world and to find their causes there. In
this sense a Michael deed was performed in the super-sensible realm
shortly before our time, a deed I should like to characterize in the
following way. In doing so I must speak in a manner that is nowadays
discredited as anthropomorphic; but how could I relate it otherwise
than by using human words to describe what occurs in the super-sensible
world?
The epoch during which Michael cast the Dragon down to earth was
thought of as lying far back in the pre-human times; but then, man
appeared upon the earth and there occurred what I have described: the
war between Michael and the Dragon became ever more an inner struggle.
It was at the end of the 19th century that Michael could say: The
image in man is now sufficiently condensed for him to be aware of it
within himself: he can now feel in his Gemüt the Conqueror
of the Dragon — at least, the image means something to him.
— In the evolution of mankind the last third of the 19th Century
stands for something extraordinarily important. In older times there
was in man primarily only a tenuous image of Michael; but it condensed
more and more, and in the last third of the 19th Century there
appeared what follows: In earlier times the invisible, super-sensible
Dragon was predominant, active in the passions and instincts, in the
desires and in the animal lusts. For ordinary consciousness that
Dragon remains subsensible; he dwells in man's animal nature. But
there he lives in all that tends to drag man down, goading him into
becoming gradually sub-human. The condition was such that Michael
always intervened in human nature, in order that humanity should not
fall too low.
But in the last third of the 19th Century the Michael image became so
strong in man that the matter of directing his feelings upward and
rising to the Michael image came to depend upon his good-will, so to
speak; so that on the one hand, in unenlightened experience of the
feelings, he may glimpse the image of the Dragon, and on the other
hand, the radiant figure of Michael may stand before the soul's eye
— radiant in spiritual vision, yet within the reach of ordinary
consciousness. So the content of the human Gemüt can be
this: The power of the Dragon is working within me, trying to drag me
down. I do not see it — I feel it as something that would
drag me down below myself. But in the spirit I see the luminous
Angel whose cosmic task has always been the vanquishing of the Dragon.
I concentrate my Gemüt upon this glowing figure, I let its light
stream into my Gemüt, and thus my illumined and warmed
Gemüt will bear within it the strength of Michael. And out of
a free resolution I shall be able, through my alliance with Michael,
to conquer the Dragon's might in my own lower nature.
If the requisite good-will were forthcoming in extensive circles to
raise such a conception to a religious force and to inscribe it in
every Gemüt we would not have all the vague and impotent ideas
such as prevail in every quarter today — plans for reforms, and
the like. Rather, we would have something that once again could seize
hold on the whole inner man, because that is what can be inscribed in
the living Gemüt — that living Gemüt
which enters into a living relationship with the whole cosmos the
moment it really comes to life.
Then those glowing Michael thoughts would be the first harbingers of
our ability to penetrate once more into the super-sensible world. The
striving for enlightenment would become inwardly and deeply religious.
And thereby men would be prepared for the festivals of the year, the
understanding of which only glimmers faintly across the ages —
but at least it glimmers — and they would celebrate in full
consciousness the festival the calendar sets at the end of September,
at the beginning of autumn: the Michael Festival. This will regain its
significance only when we are able to experience in our soul such a
living vision. And when we are able to feel it in a living way and to
make it into an instinctive social impulse of the present, then this
Michael Festival — because the impulses spring directly from the
spiritual world — could be regarded as the crowning impulse
— even the initial impulse we need to find our way out of the
present disaster: to add something real to all the talk about ideals,
something not originating in human heads or hearts but in the cosmos.
And then, when the trees shed their leaves and blossoms ripen into
fruit, when nature sends us her first frost and prepares to sink into
her winter death, we would be able to feel the burgeoning of spirit,
with which we should unite ourselves — just as we feel the Easter
Festival with the sprouting, budding spring. Then, as citizens of the
cosmos, we would be able to carry impulses into our lives which, not
being abstract, would not remain ineffectual but would manifest their
power immediately. Life will not have a soul content again until we
can develop cosmic impulses in our Gemüt.
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